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Barack Obama sells out to the UN by giving the United Nations jurisdiction to go after the State of Arizona and the 22 other
states that are attempting to enforce the immigration laws that he refuses to enforce.
Unfortunately, you read that right. On August 20, the United States, for the first time ever, submitted a
29 page “Universal Periodic Review” (UPR) to the UN Human Rights Council which outlines a laundry list of
alleged human rights abuses supposedly committed by the United States.
Of course, the UPR is pure rubbish, but it’s also much more than an opportunity for Barack Hussein Obama,
the Apologist-In-Chief, to bad-mouth America to the rest of the world. Contained within that laundry list
of so-called abuses is a direct condemnation of S.B. 1070, legislation enacted by the State of Arizona
(and supported by two-thirds of the American people), which seeks to do the job that the federal government
has refused to do… secure the border.
According to the UPR: “A recent Arizona law, S.B. 1070, has generated significant attention and debate at
home and around the world. The issue is being addressed in a court action that argues that the federal
government has the authority to set and enforce immigration law. That action is ongoing; parts of the law
are currently enjoined.”
The submission of this UPR is the first step in a United Nations review process which will culminate with
the issuance of a plan of action, approximately 90 days from now, from a panel of UN bureaucrats from
France, Japan, and Cameroon.
And yes… the United States would be expected to “voluntarily” comply with the UN panel’s recommendations,
but as the UN Human Rights Council states on its website: “The Human Rights Council will decide on the
measures it would need to take in case of persistent non-cooperation by a State….”
In short, Barack Obama has upped the ante. Not content with simply filing a frivolous federal suit against
the people of Arizona, Obama has transformed his amnesty feud with the American people into an international
human rights cause and effectively placed the people of Arizona (and the 22 other states that are
considering similar border security legislation) under the jurisdiction of a triumvirate of America-hating
United Nations bureaucrats.
Let your Congressman know how you feel about this sell out to the U.N.
American voters say 48-31 percent they want their state to pass an immigration law similar
to Arizona’s and by an overwhelming 76-12 percent they say that plans by those opposed to the
law to boycott Arizona are a bad idea, according to a Quinnipiac University poll released today.
Quinnipiac University poll also indicates that voters approve 51-31
percent immigration reform to move in the direction of stricter enforcement rather than
integrating immigrants into American society.
The L.A. Times yesterday reported, “Overall, 50% of registered voters surveyed said they
support the law, the law applies only to people whom police have stopped for another reason,
while 43% oppose it. That level of support is lower than polls have indicated nationwide”.
Yet the L.A. County Supervisors, in all it’s arrogance and with the majority hoping to
garner the Latino votes, have voted to boycott Arizona.
The Arizona law nearly mirrors California penal code 834B, yet, neither the L.A. City Clowncil nor
the L.A. County Stupidvisors have yet to take steps to boycott California.
It’s amazing to me that we keep electing the same air-heads time after time. They
don’t seem to understand that these boycotts will put the very people they are supposedly
trying to aid, out of work.
Just recently President Calderon of Mexico visited our Congress and proceeded
to lecture us on our immigration policy.
I could rant and rave about this discourtesy but this has adequately been done
for me…..not ranting and raving but a polite and informative disertation on
becoming a citizen of the United States.
Please click on the following link to view this wonderful rebuttal:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ldx8gZDwZWs
He’s saying it like it is….and I agree wholeheartedly!
by Michelle Malkin
Mexican President Felipe Calderon has accused Arizona of opening the door “to intolerance,
hate, discrimination and abuse in law enforcement.” But Arizona has nothing on Mexico when
it comes to cracking down on illegal aliens. While open-borders activists decry new enforcement
measures signed into law in “Nazi-zona” last week, they remain deaf, dumb or willfully blind
to the unapologetically restrictionist policies of our neighbors to the south.
The Arizona law bans sanctuary cities that refuse to enforce immigration laws, stiffens
penalties against illegal alien day laborers and their employers, makes it a misdemeanor
for immigrants to fail to complete and carry an alien registration document, and allows
the police to arrest immigrants unable to show documents proving they are in the U.S. legally.
If those rules constitute the racist, fascist, xenophobic, inhumane regime that the National
Council of La Raza, Al Sharpton, Catholic bishops and their grievance-mongering followers
claim, then what about these regulations and restrictions imposed on foreigners?
- The Mexican government will bar foreigners if they upset “the equilibrium of the national
demographics.” How’s that for racial and ethnic profiling?
- If outsiders do not enhance the country’s “economic or national interests” or are “not found
to be physically or mentally healthy,” they are not welcome. Neither are those who show
“contempt against national sovereignty or security.” They must not be economic burdens on
society and must have clean criminal histories. Those seeking to obtain Mexican citizenship
must show a birth certificate, provide a bank statement proving economic independence, pass
an exam and prove they can provide their own health care.
- Illegal entry into the country is equivalent to a felony punishable by two years’
imprisonment. Document fraud is subject to fine and imprisonment; so is alien marriage fraud.
Evading deportation is a serious crime; illegal re-entry after deportation is punishable by
ten years’ imprisonment. Foreigners may be kicked out of the country without due process and
the endless bites at the litigation apple that illegal aliens are afforded in our country
(see, for example, President Obama’s illegal alien aunt — a fugitive from deportation for
eight years who is awaiting a second decision on her previously rejected asylum claim).
- Law enforcement officials at all levels — by national mandate — must cooperate to enforce
immigration laws, including illegal alien arrests and deportations. The Mexican military is
also required to assist in immigration enforcement operations. Native-born Mexicans are
empowered to make citizens’ arrests of illegal aliens and turn them in to authorities.
- Ready to show your papers? Mexico’s National Catalog of Foreigners tracks all outside
tourists and foreign nationals. A National Population Registry tracks and verifies the identity
of every member of the population, who must carry a citizens’ identity card. Visitors who do
not possess proper documents and identification are subject to arrest as illegal aliens.
All of these provisions are enshrined in Mexico’s Ley General de Población (General Law of the
Population) and were spotlighted in a 2006 research paper published by the Washington, D.C.
-based Center for Security Policy. There’s been no public clamor for “comprehensive immigration
reform” in Mexico, however, because pro-illegal alien speech by outsiders is prohibited.
Consider: Open-borders protesters marched freely at the Capitol building in Arizona, comparing
GOP Gov. Jan Brewer to Hitler, waving Mexican flags, advocating that demonstrators “Smash the
State,” and holding signs that proclaimed “No human is illegal” and “We have rights.”
But under the Mexican constitution, such political speech by foreigners is banned. Noncitizens
cannot “in any way participate in the political affairs of the country.” In fact, a plethora of
Mexican statutes enacted by its congress limit the participation of foreign nationals and
companies in everything from investment, education, mining and civil aviation to electric
energy and firearms. Foreigners have severely limited private property and employment rights
(if any).
As for abuse, the Mexican government is notorious for its abuse of Central American illegal
aliens who attempt to violate Mexico’s southern border. The Red Cross has protested rampant
Mexican police corruption, intimidation and bribery schemes targeting illegal aliens there
for years. Mexico didn’t respond by granting mass amnesty to illegal aliens, as it is demanding
that we do. It clamped down on its borders even further. In late 2008, the Mexican government
launched an aggressive deportation plan to curtain illegal Cuban immigration and human
trafficking through Cancun.
Meanwhile, Mexican consular offices in the United States have coordinated with left-wing social
justice groups and the Catholic Church leadership to demand a moratorium on all deportations
and a freeze on all employment raids across America.
Mexico is doing the job Arizona is now doing — a job the U.S. government has failed miserably
to do: putting its people first. Here’s the proper rejoinder to all the hysterical demagogues
in Mexico (and their sympathizers here on American soil) now calling for boycotts and invoking
Jim Crow laws, apartheid and the Holocaust because Arizona has taken its sovereignty into its
own hands:
Hipócritas.
Visit the Source.
By George Will
WASHINGTON — A simple reform would drain some scalding steam from immigration arguments that
may soon again be at a roiling boil. It would bring the interpretation of the 14th Amendment
into conformity with what the authors of its text intended, and with common sense, thereby
removing an incentive for illegal immigration.
To end the practice of “birthright citizenship,” all that is required is to correct the misinterpretation of that amendment’s first sentence: “All persons born or naturalized in
the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the state wherein they reside.” From these words has flowed the practice of conferring citizenship on children born here to illegal immigrants.
A parent from a poor country, writes professor Lino Graglia of the University of Texas law
school, “can hardly do more for a child than make him or her an American citizen, entitled
to all the advantages of the American welfare state.” Therefore, “It is difficult to imagine
a more irrational and self-defeating legal system than one which makes unauthorized entry into
this country a criminal offense and simultaneously provides perhaps the greatest possible inducement to illegal entry.”
Writing in the Texas Review of Law and Politics, Graglia says this irrationality is rooted in a misunderstanding of the phrase “subject to the jurisdiction thereof.” What was this intended or understood to mean by those who wrote it in 1866 and ratified it in 1868? The
authors and ratifiers could not have intended birthright citizenship for illegal immigrants
because in 1868 there were and never had been any illegal immigrants because no law ever had restricted immigration.
If those who wrote and ratified the 14th Amendment had imagined laws restricting immigration — and had anticipated huge waves of illegal immigration — is it reasonable to presume they would have wanted to provide the reward of citizenship to the children of the violators of those laws? Surely not.
The Civil Rights Act of 1866 begins with language from which the 14th Amendment’s Citizenship Clause is derived: “All persons born in the United States, and not subject to any foreign power,
excluding Indians not taxed, are hereby declared to be citizens of the United States.”
(Emphasis added.)
The explicit exclusion of Indians from birthright citizenship was not repeated in the 14th Amendment because it was considered unnecessary. Although Indians were at least partially subject to U.S. jurisdiction, they owed allegiance to their tribes, not the United States. This reasoning — divided allegiance — applies equally to exclude the children of resident aliens, legal as well as illegal, from birthright citizenship. Indeed, today’s regulations issued by the departments of Homeland Security and Justice stipulate:
- “A person born in the United States to a foreign diplomatic officer accredited to the United States, as a matter of international law, is not subject to the jurisdiction of the United
States. That person is not a United States citizen under the 14th Amendment.”
Sen. Lyman Trumbull of Illinois was, Graglia writes, one of two “principal authors of the
citizenship clauses in 1866 act and the 14th Amendment.” He said that “subject to the
jurisdiction of the United States” meant subject to its “complete” jurisdiction, meaning
“not owing allegiance to anybody else.” Hence children whose Indian parents had tribal
allegiances were excluded from birthright citizenship.
Appropriately, in 1884 the Supreme Court held that children born to Indian parents were not born “subject to” U.S. jurisdiction because, among other reasons, the person so born could not change his status by his “own will without the action or assent of the United States.” And “no one can become a citizen of a nation without its consent.” Graglia says this decision “seemed to establish” that U.S. citizenship is “a consensual relation, requiring the consent of the United States.” So: “This would clearly settle the question of birthright citizenship for children of illegal aliens. There cannot be a more total or forceful denial of consent to a person’s citizenship than to make the source of that person’s presence in the nation illegal.”
Congress has heard testimony estimating that more than two-thirds of all births in Los Angeles
public hospitals, and more than half of all births in that city, and nearly 10 percent of all
births in the nation in recent years, have been to illegal immigrant mothers. Graglia seems
to establish that there is no constitutional impediment to Congress ending the granting of
birthright citizenship to persons whose presence here is “not only without the government’s
consent but in violation of its law.”
Visit the Townhall website.
ALERT! Rep. Gutierrez introduces amnesty bill!
The unemployment rate has increased to 10.2 percent, the highest rate in over 25 years. Since the start of the recession, the number of unemployed American workers has risen by over 8 million, to almost 16 million.
In spite of this tragedy, Congress has done nothing to prevent American workers from being displaced by foreign workers and illegal aliens. While paying lip service to the plight of the unemployed, Congress continues to import a million legal immigrants each year and turn a blind eye to the ongoing flood of illegal immigration.
With over 15 million Americans out of work, one might think Congress would focus on this issue. Instead,
Rep. Luis Gutierrez (D-IL) has introduced his “comprehensive” immigration reform bill.
He previously outlined the components of his amnesty bill, granting legal status to illegal aliens, increasing the number of immigrant visas, and reducing wait times for family members of previously admitted immigrants to gain U.S. residency.
Gutierrez said he introduced the bill before the holiday recess so “there is no excuse for inaction in the New Year.” Apparently, the Congressman’s Christmas gift to unemployed Americans is the permanent disappearance of their jobs.
This proposal is not just amnesty-lite, but amnesty-heavy, a step toward virtually unrestricted immigration.
ACTION NEEDED
Click here to contact your Representative in Congress and let him know how you feel about this legislation.
A Detailed Look at Immigrant Employment by Occupation
By Steven A. Camarota and Karen Jensenius
This analysis tests the often-made argument that immigrants only do jobs Americans don’t want. If the argument is correct, there should be occupations comprised entirely or almost entirely of immigrants. But Census Bureau data collected from 2005 to 2007, which allow for very detailed analysis, show that even before the recession there were only a tiny number of majority-immigrant occupations. Just Click HERE to download this 12 page report.
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